- The
order Embioptera,
commonly known as
webspinners or footspinners, are a
small group of
mostly tropical and
subtropical insects,
classified under the...
-
insects also have spinnerets, such as
those borne on the
forelegs of
Embioptera.
Spinnerets are
usually on the
underside of a spider's opisthosoma, and...
-
pretarsus expands forward into a
median lobe, the arolium.
Webspinners (
Embioptera) have an
enlarged basal tarsomere on each of the
front legs, containing...
-
Titanoptera (Extinct)
Protorthoptera (Extinct)
Plecoptera (stoneflies)
Embioptera (webspinners)
Zoraptera (angel insects)
Dermaptera (earwigs) Orthoptera...
-
Burmese amber is
fossil resin dating to the
early Late
Cretaceous Cenomanian age
recovered from
deposits in the
Hukawng Valley of
northern Myanmar. It...
- (Anartioptera)
order Orthoptera order Plecoptera order Dermaptera order Embioptera order Phasmatodea superorder Blattopteroidea (senior name: Pandictyoptera)...
-
Phasmatodea (stick insects, 3,014 spp)
Embioptera (webspinners, 463 spp)...
-
Plecoptera (stoneflies)
Dermaptera (earwigs)
Embioptera (webspinners)
Phasmatodea (stick and leaf insects)
Orthoptera (crickets, wetas, gr****hoppers, locusts)...
-
including Phasmatodea (stick insects),
Mantophasmatidae (gladiators),
Embioptera (webspinners), and
Raphidioptera (snakeflies). The
earliest scale insect...
-
Titanoptera †(extinct)
Protorthoptera †(extinct)
Plecoptera (stoneflies)
Embioptera (webspinners)
Zoraptera (angel insects)
Dermaptera (earwigs) Orthoptera...